Oregon will learn its fate on Wednesday when the NCAA announces the highly anticipated sanctions against the Ducks for recruiting violations.

Oregon appeared before the Committee of Infractions in April to address charges related to former high school scout Willie Lyles, as well as other charges.

The NCAA alleges that Oregon committed major violations between 2008 and 2011. Former coach Chip Kelly allegedly used Lyles to lure recruits to the Eugene, Ore. campus, and paid him $25,000 for what was essentially useless information.

Oregon did not dispute the payment, but says the recruiting reports provided are at most a secondary violation. The NCAA, in its summary of findings after a nearly two-year investigation, disagreed.

Oregon has proposed a self-imposed two-year probation and the reduction of one scholarship per year for the next three seasons. Oregon did not self-impose a postseason ban. The NCAA will either accept that proposal or add to it.

Lyles says that in 2011, Oregon asked him to quickly put together a recruiting package that would reflect the $25,000 payment the university had made to him. But, the material he provided was outdated. Further, the NCAA considered Lyles a booster because of his involvement with the university. Oregon says that Lyles merely helped direct the coaches around high school campuses and didn’t assist in the recruitment of prospects.

In addition to the Lyles involvement, the NCAA says that Oregon staff members made hundreds of impermissible phone calls to recruits. The NCAA agreed in the summary disposition that the violations were not intentional, but the Ducks’ staff was still responsible for enforcing the rules.